On Junе 27, 1995, the defendant was charged in a complaint with one count of assault and battery on his wife, Sally Van Melkebeke. Prior to trial, the defendаnt filed a motion to suppress his confession to a police officer. The Commonwealth made a motion in limine to allow in evidence the
On appeal, the defendant claims that the judge erred in (1) allowing in evidence the defendant’s confession absent a showing that the confession was voluntarily given; (2) failing to instruct the jury in accordance with Massachusetts “humanе practice” concerning the issue of the voluntariness of the confession; (3) allowing the officer to testify to the contents of the wife’s statement; and (4) failing to declare a mistrial when a witness testified that the defendant had previously been in jail.
We summarize the evidence intrоduced at trial in order to provide a background for our analysis of the issues. The Commonwealth’s evidence came from the wife’s niece and a police officer. The defendant’s wife and two other witnesses testified on behalf of the defendant. On June 26, 1995, the defendant lived with his wife in an apartment in Weymouth. At about 8:00 p.m., the wife’s niece came to the apartment with her stepbrother and a boy friend. When the niece arrived, she noticed that the wife was “a little bit” intoxicated, and the defendant also appeared to have been drinking. The five began to consume vodka drinks together.
During the course of the evening, the defendant became “very drunk” and obnoxious. He and his wife began arguing, and thе wife then asked ¿veryone to leave but, as they did, the defendant began pushing his wife.
A police officer arrived at the apartment in resрonse to a radio dispatch concerning a domestic disturbance. Only the defendant and his wife were present. The officer noticеd a small amount of blood on the wife’s face and spoke to her about it. She told the officer that she had a physical confrontаtion with her husband; the defendant had bit her on the face three or four times, grabbed her upper arms and “squeezed them tight,” and scraped her fаce with his hands. The officer noticed red marks and bruises on the wife’s upper arms and what appeared to be a human bite mark on her сheek.
The defendant was sitting on a couch and appeared to be intoxicated. The officer gave the defendant the Miranda warnings. The defendant then told the officer that he had “hit his
The wife wаs called as a defense witness at trial and testified that the defendant had not hit her. She stated that she was injured while attempting to break up а fight between her husband and her daughter’s boy friend. The wife admitted that she was angry with the defendant on the evening in question because she had just discovered that he was having an affair. She stated that she told the officer that the defendant had assaulted her because she was enraged оver his infidelity.
1. The admission in evidence of the defendant’s confession. In Massachusetts under our “humane practice,” a judge has a “constitutional obligation to conduct a voir dire examination in the absence of the jury where the voluntariness of a confession is in issue and to make an affirmative finding of voluntariness before the jury are аllowed to consider it.” Commonwealth v. Crawford,
In this case, the defendant filed a motion to suppress his stаtement to the officer, claiming that at the time he made it he was “extremely intoxicated” and, therefore, did not make a knowing and voluntаry waiver of his Miranda rights. As a separate ground, the defendant claimed that, because of his intoxication, his statement was involuntary under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
After a hearing, the judge denied the defendant’s motion. He ruled that, although the defendant was intoxicаted, his waiver of the Miranda rights was voluntary. However, the judge failed to make any finding or ruling on the separate challenge to the voluntariness of the defendant’s statement based on his intoxication. The omission was error because, once the issue of voluntariness has been raised (as here in the defendant’s suppression motion), “[d]ue process requires a separate inquiry into the voluntariness of the defendant’s statement[] apart from the validity of the Miranda waiver.” Commonwealth v. Magee,
It is clear (indeed the Commonwealth so concedes in its brief) that the voluntariness of the defendant’s statement was a live issue at trial. Therefore, the humanе practice requires that “[i]f the statement is later admitted at trial, and if voluntariness is a live issue, the judge must instruct the jury ‘that the Commonwealth has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the statement was voluntary and that the jurors must disregard the statement unless the Commonwealth has met its burden.’ ” Commonwealth v. Watkins,
Here, the defendant requested in writing that the judge instruct the jury in accordance with the humane practice. The judge refused, and the jury were never instructed as to their independent role in deciding the voluntariness of the defendant’s statement.
The judge’s multiple errors in regard to the voluntariness issue were not harmless. See Commonwealth v. Hooper,
2. Other issues. The defendant challenges the judge’s decision to admit his wife’s statement as a spontaneous utterance. Because the issue will undoubtedly be raised at retrial, we will briefly consider it.
After examining the issue, we conclude that the judge did not abuse his discretion in allowing the wife’s statement in evidence as a spontaneous utterance. See Commonwealth v. Whelton,
The defendant’s claim that the judge committed error when
3. Conclusion. The judgment is reversed, the verdict is set aside, and the case is remanded for a new trial.
So ordered.
